Artist - Hart, Frederick

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Title: Daughters of Odessa 1/3 Life Scale
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Bronze
Dimensions: 26"
Price: call gallery for quote
Comments: Price Upon Request
Title: Destiny
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Clear Acrylic Resin
Dimensions: 12"
Price: call gallery for quote
Title: Ex Nihilo
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Bronze
Dimensions: 27 1/8" x 34 1/2"
Price: call gallery for quote
Title: Family
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Bronze
Dimensions: 7"
Price: call gallery for quote
Title: Illuminate II
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Clear Acrylic Resin
Dimensions: 14"
Price: call gallery for quote
Title: Songs of Grace - Faith
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Clear Acrylic Resin
Dimensions: 25" with Base
Price: call gallery for quote
Title: The Cross of the Millennium State II
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Clear Acrylic Resin
Dimensions: 11"
Price: call gallery for quote
Title: The Divine Milleu
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Clear Acrylic Resin
Dimensions: 20"
Price: call gallery for quote
Title: The Source
Category: Sculpture
Medium: Bronze
Dimensions:
Price: call gallery for quote
Hart, Frederick
Frederick Hart was born in Atlanta in 1943. Hart attended the University of South Carolina, the Corcoran School of Art and American University from 1960 through 1966.

In 1974 he won an international competition to design the west facade of the Washington National Cathedral. In 1979 he created the processional cross for Pope John Paul II that was used for the historic mass on the mall in Washington, D.C. In 1984, Hart's historic "Three Soldiers", is installed at the site of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. and dedicated by President Ronald Reagan.

We sometimes forget that great men, great artists, caught as they are in the glare of history's spotlight, are not great from birth: are not hatched into quick fame; but reach completeness slowly, deliberately, under the watchful tutledge of time. Rodin, for example, that colossus of nineteenth century sculpture, did not achieve immediate recognition. More that a few parallels have been drawn between Auguste Rodin and that of the young American sculptor Frederick Hart. Time magazine wrote....."The three U.S. soldiers, cast in bronze, stand a bit larger than life, carry automatic weapons and wear fatigues, but the pose is not John Wayne-heroic: the American boys are spectral and wary, even slightly bewildered. "J.Carter Brown, Chairman of the Fine Arts Committee and Director of the National Gallery, called it 'a credit to Hart....the three soldiers act as kind of Greek chorus facing the monument, commenting on it's meaning.'" Frederick Hart's works will live on as a benchmark to future sculptors. His legacy will be penned in history books as one of the greatest, artists of the 20th century.